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Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1974-04-18

Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1974-04-18, page 01

HRONICLE
LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY 1982 VELM/» AVE« r,-' V' 00L8. 0, 43211 . ,,/EXOR/, j
" ,, V - "V > ,i '
ZjIvJ/ Serving Coluhibus and Central Ohio fJewlshCommunity tor Over 50 Years \jPfcL
■„. .....Jdtion ~1^- ! :
VOL. 52 NO. ..If B'flth. Will BteL APRIL 18. 1974 - NISAN 26
Terrorists Kill 18 In Israel
WASHINGTON (WNS) — Defense Department spokesman Jerry Friedheim told newsmen that Israel, has been receiving a "continuous flow" of weapons from the United States during the fighting on the Golan Heights. But he refused to disclose what kind of weapons. He did say that Israel wants the Shrike air- /' to-ground missiles to knock out anti-aircraft sites. Friedheim said there had been steady arms shipments to Israel since the end of the Yom Kippur War, but the pace had not increased since Syria began it's daily shootings'along the Israel-Syrian cease-fire line a month ago.
• LONDON (WNS) — Alexander Feldman, who is serving a 3% year sentence at a Soviet labor camp has just been released after 55 days in solitary con¬ finement, according to Jewish sources in the Soviet Union. Hie sources also reported that Israel Zalmanson, serving an eight-year sentence at Potma labor camp is presently In solitary confinement. Meanwhile in New York, the National Conference on Soviet Jewry reported that Feldman's fiance, Tatyana Chernoshova, was arrested as she was about to leave • Kiev by train for Moscow. She was released and told that the arrest was a mistake. The NCSJ also reported that Yuri Pokh, serving a three-year sentence in Berdyansk, was put on strict regime for five days because he was unable to fulfill his work quota. He had just been released from 2V& months in the camp hospital.
WASHINGTON (WNS) —'Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman (D.N.Y.) has charged before a House immigration subcommittee that the U.S. Immigration Service has neglected to move against at least 38 alleged Nazi war criminals \yho live in the United States. She later,said that the.U.S.-Immigration and Naturalization Service has admitted to her that they have done nothing over, a none-mohth period to institute deportation proceedings against the alleged war criminals. She said that some of the alleged war criminals have been in the U.S., almost 25 years and 25 of them have become naturalized citizens.
KIRAYAT SHEMONA (WNS) — Three terrorists invaded this town near the Lebanese border and killed 18 people - eight of them children - and wounded 15 others - including 'two* policemen, three border patrol guards and three soldiers - during a four-hour rampage with machinegiins, bazookas and grenades' before they were killed by Israeli security forces. The terrorists belonged to a group calling Itself "The Popular Front - The General Command" headed by Ah¬ med \ Jabril with headquarters in Beirut, the same gang which claimed it had slaughtered children in a school bus near Avivim three years ago. At least two of the dead were soldiers, the rest mostly women and children who were mowed down by automatic fire or grenades. Several soldiers were among the wounded. Considerable damage was done to buildings in the town. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan rushed to the scene by helicopter froni a Cabinet meeting'* in Jerusalem,' ac¬ companied by Acting Chief of Staff Yitzhak Hofi. About 300 residents demonstrated in the streets of Kiryat Shemona after the massacre to protest alleged lack of
security measures. The Upper Galilee town of 15,000 persons has a ,large im¬ migrant population and has t been a frequent target of terrorist attacks from Lebanese territory.
According to accounts, the terrorists infiltrated across the Lebanese border during the night and invaded the town in the early morning.
They .occupied a school building, empty because.of the Passover holiday and began shooting wildly at passers-by. When security forces rushed to the scene, the terrorists escaped down a hill and occupied a four- story apartment building murdering many of the occupants. According to eyewitnesses, they tossed
the bodies of their victims, including children, out of windows. .They had gone through 'the building systematically opening every apartment and murdering in cold blood the people inside. During thatpV time of the day the men wer^s" •/ at work leaving only the women and children at-v-
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 3) . '"
Premeir Golda Meir Resigns
JERUSALEM (WNS) - ' Premier Golda Meir has resigned after the Labor Party failed to end its facutional dispute over whether Defense Minister Moshe Dayan should resign. Her resignation came a month after she put a coalition government together and may bring about the scheduling of a new election unless all factions of the Labor Party and its coalition partners can agree upon a successor to Mrs. Meir. Mrs. Meir made her announcement at a Labor Party meeting saying "I have reached the end of the road. I cannot carry on any longer". She said her decision was not "linked to Dayan but to me per¬ sonally". But her an¬ nouncement came after hectic meetings of the various components of the Labor Party which sought a compromise-to preserve the coalition government while meeting the demands, both' within the Labor Alignment and from the opposition Likud, for Dayan's ■resignation over Israel's unpreparedness for the Yom Kippur War. In her resignation speech
to the Knesset, Mrs. Meir said that since the recent elections "I have been watching closely develop¬ ments in the country and I have reached the conclusion that there is a public unrest- which cannot be avoided" and that the public should have an opportunity to study , the possibility of a new government: would be capable of handling the situation and the army was prepared to cope with all challenges. She called on the nation "to ,behave not like a .stricken people .but like a people with >a: future open before it.'VA A
President Ephraim Katzir. said he would begin con¬ sulting immediately with various parties to select a new premier.: HeVpraised Mrs. Meir's immense contributions to the national renaissance which he said, could not yet bev fully ap¬ preciated. He said that a deep sense of responsibility for the future of the State has guided Mrs. Meir's every action throughout her long - career and had prompted
her to shoulder the heaviest.
burdens of leadership. ..'■ :
Meanwhile the various;
grass roots" protest
movements that have built up in reaction to»the Yom Kippur War have come, together into one organization and selected Yochai Biri-Nopn, a former naval commander and national hero as its leader. Among the stated aims of the movement is the infusion of .new blood into the national leadership, and election reform.
llth Annual Holocaust Day Program To Be At Beth Jacob Synagogue Apr. 28
Mr. Ben Grinblatt, chairman of the llth annual Holocaust Day Program at the Beth Jacob Congregation has announced that the program <-will be held on April 28,1974 at 10:30 a.m. at- the Beth Jacob Synagogue. The guest speaker is a very dynamic leader of the American Jewish Israeli community, - Israel Fried¬ man. Mr. Friedman is the' executive vice president of the Religious Zionists of America. , -
During World War, II he served as' secretary of the American+Israeli Vaad Hatzala under the chair¬ manship of the late Chief Rabbi Isaac Halevy Herzog. This Vaad, in coordination with the American Jewish Joint distribution Com¬ mittee, dealt with extending help to refugees especially of the Rabbinate and Yeshiva groups who fled' to Russia and Siberia. In 1948-1949 he was the secretary of the United Religious Bloc in the Knesset. Upon the inception of the State of Israel in 1948, Mr. Friedman served as the First Secretary to the Minister of Religion, the late Rabbi Yehuda Leib Maimon. Mr. Grinblatt further announced that Cantor Herman Blonder will recite
v>
Planning committee for the community wide Holocaust program is pictured above. L to R, Rabbi Stavsky, Irv Szames, Mrs. Martin Hoffman, E'en Grinblatt and Martin Hoffman.
the "Kel Mole Raehamin" prayer and that six memorial lights will be lit by children whose parents are survivors of the Holocaust. There will also be readings
of appropriate Psalms and a dramatic presentation as well.
The entire community is cordially invited to share in this Jewish destiny.
Pornography Is Subject Of Center Public Affairs Meet Monday At Bexley Theatre
Blood Day To Be Apr. 22
Sunday April 21 is the day set for crash calling of the Jewish Community by the Blood Donor Council. Members of the Jewish Community will be con¬ tacted and asked to donate about an hour of time-and one unit of blood to supply the quita for the Columbus Jewish Community Blood Bank.
Calling will take place between the hours of 10.: 00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. The goal is to contact every former donor and prospective donor in the city to inform them of B-day on May 1 from 12 noon til 6 p.m. at the Jewish. Center.
As always, babysitting is provided, sandwiches, cookies and coffee or tea are served, and this year donors get an added bonus. Each donor will receive one free pass to the' Drexel Theatre. The passes are good Sunday thru Friday until July 30.
As the Columbus Jewish community grows, so grows the need for new and more blood donors. Many mem¬ bers of the community are not aware that they are covered under a blood bank program, whether or not they personally donate. The Blood Donor Council believes itis incumbent upon
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 141
A searching inquiry into the explosive subject of pornography will be presented Monday, April 22, at 8:15 p.m. at the Bexley Theater, 2484 East Main St., by the Adult Services Committee of the Jewish Center.
The third in a series of public affairs programs produced by the committee, "Pornography - What Is It?", will be open to the public. Admission is free.
Panelists will include Dr. Nancy Clatworthy, professor of sociology at Ohio State University; Laurence Sturtz, attorney and frequent defense counsel for local theater owners charged with exhibiting obscene or, pornographic films; Robert Blair, manager of the Bexley and World Theaters, and Miles Durfey, head of appellate staff for the county prosecuting attorney.
Mrs. Helga Eisen will serve as moderator. Howard Byer is committee chair¬ man, i
"This will not be a debate with'members of ~the panel, for or, against," said Mrs. .Eisen. "Rather panelists will examine pornography from the aspects of defining it, possible effects on the behavior of children and adults, standards involved in determining what is por¬ nographic and the problems of law enforcement and censorship.-We want to be ,'informative, not opinionated."
Film clips will be shown at the start of the program to illustrate various types of film under discussion.
Previous public affiars programs produced by the Adult Services Committee dealt with impeachment and with desegration in Columbus public schools. A fourth program is being planne'd for May,
' ^4 'III
'A

HRONICLE
LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY 1982 VELM/» AVE« r,-' V' 00L8. 0, 43211 . ,,/EXOR/, j
" ,, V - "V > ,i '
ZjIvJ/ Serving Coluhibus and Central Ohio fJewlshCommunity tor Over 50 Years \jPfcL
■„. .....Jdtion ~1^- ! :
VOL. 52 NO. ..If B'flth. Will BteL APRIL 18. 1974 - NISAN 26
Terrorists Kill 18 In Israel
WASHINGTON (WNS) — Defense Department spokesman Jerry Friedheim told newsmen that Israel, has been receiving a "continuous flow" of weapons from the United States during the fighting on the Golan Heights. But he refused to disclose what kind of weapons. He did say that Israel wants the Shrike air- /' to-ground missiles to knock out anti-aircraft sites. Friedheim said there had been steady arms shipments to Israel since the end of the Yom Kippur War, but the pace had not increased since Syria began it's daily shootings'along the Israel-Syrian cease-fire line a month ago.
• LONDON (WNS) — Alexander Feldman, who is serving a 3% year sentence at a Soviet labor camp has just been released after 55 days in solitary con¬ finement, according to Jewish sources in the Soviet Union. Hie sources also reported that Israel Zalmanson, serving an eight-year sentence at Potma labor camp is presently In solitary confinement. Meanwhile in New York, the National Conference on Soviet Jewry reported that Feldman's fiance, Tatyana Chernoshova, was arrested as she was about to leave • Kiev by train for Moscow. She was released and told that the arrest was a mistake. The NCSJ also reported that Yuri Pokh, serving a three-year sentence in Berdyansk, was put on strict regime for five days because he was unable to fulfill his work quota. He had just been released from 2V& months in the camp hospital.
WASHINGTON (WNS) —'Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman (D.N.Y.) has charged before a House immigration subcommittee that the U.S. Immigration Service has neglected to move against at least 38 alleged Nazi war criminals \yho live in the United States. She later,said that the.U.S.-Immigration and Naturalization Service has admitted to her that they have done nothing over, a none-mohth period to institute deportation proceedings against the alleged war criminals. She said that some of the alleged war criminals have been in the U.S., almost 25 years and 25 of them have become naturalized citizens.
KIRAYAT SHEMONA (WNS) — Three terrorists invaded this town near the Lebanese border and killed 18 people - eight of them children - and wounded 15 others - including 'two* policemen, three border patrol guards and three soldiers - during a four-hour rampage with machinegiins, bazookas and grenades' before they were killed by Israeli security forces. The terrorists belonged to a group calling Itself "The Popular Front - The General Command" headed by Ah¬ med \ Jabril with headquarters in Beirut, the same gang which claimed it had slaughtered children in a school bus near Avivim three years ago. At least two of the dead were soldiers, the rest mostly women and children who were mowed down by automatic fire or grenades. Several soldiers were among the wounded. Considerable damage was done to buildings in the town. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan rushed to the scene by helicopter froni a Cabinet meeting'* in Jerusalem,' ac¬ companied by Acting Chief of Staff Yitzhak Hofi. About 300 residents demonstrated in the streets of Kiryat Shemona after the massacre to protest alleged lack of
security measures. The Upper Galilee town of 15,000 persons has a ,large im¬ migrant population and has t been a frequent target of terrorist attacks from Lebanese territory.
According to accounts, the terrorists infiltrated across the Lebanese border during the night and invaded the town in the early morning.
They .occupied a school building, empty because.of the Passover holiday and began shooting wildly at passers-by. When security forces rushed to the scene, the terrorists escaped down a hill and occupied a four- story apartment building murdering many of the occupants. According to eyewitnesses, they tossed
the bodies of their victims, including children, out of windows. .They had gone through 'the building systematically opening every apartment and murdering in cold blood the people inside. During thatpV time of the day the men wer^s" •/ at work leaving only the women and children at-v-
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 3) . '"
Premeir Golda Meir Resigns
JERUSALEM (WNS) - ' Premier Golda Meir has resigned after the Labor Party failed to end its facutional dispute over whether Defense Minister Moshe Dayan should resign. Her resignation came a month after she put a coalition government together and may bring about the scheduling of a new election unless all factions of the Labor Party and its coalition partners can agree upon a successor to Mrs. Meir. Mrs. Meir made her announcement at a Labor Party meeting saying "I have reached the end of the road. I cannot carry on any longer". She said her decision was not "linked to Dayan but to me per¬ sonally". But her an¬ nouncement came after hectic meetings of the various components of the Labor Party which sought a compromise-to preserve the coalition government while meeting the demands, both' within the Labor Alignment and from the opposition Likud, for Dayan's ■resignation over Israel's unpreparedness for the Yom Kippur War. In her resignation speech
to the Knesset, Mrs. Meir said that since the recent elections "I have been watching closely develop¬ ments in the country and I have reached the conclusion that there is a public unrest- which cannot be avoided" and that the public should have an opportunity to study , the possibility of a new government: would be capable of handling the situation and the army was prepared to cope with all challenges. She called on the nation "to ,behave not like a .stricken people .but like a people with >a: future open before it.'VA A
President Ephraim Katzir. said he would begin con¬ sulting immediately with various parties to select a new premier.: HeVpraised Mrs. Meir's immense contributions to the national renaissance which he said, could not yet bev fully ap¬ preciated. He said that a deep sense of responsibility for the future of the State has guided Mrs. Meir's every action throughout her long - career and had prompted
her to shoulder the heaviest.
burdens of leadership. ..'■ :
Meanwhile the various;
grass roots" protest
movements that have built up in reaction to»the Yom Kippur War have come, together into one organization and selected Yochai Biri-Nopn, a former naval commander and national hero as its leader. Among the stated aims of the movement is the infusion of .new blood into the national leadership, and election reform.
llth Annual Holocaust Day Program To Be At Beth Jacob Synagogue Apr. 28
Mr. Ben Grinblatt, chairman of the llth annual Holocaust Day Program at the Beth Jacob Congregation has announced that the program
Planning committee for the community wide Holocaust program is pictured above. L to R, Rabbi Stavsky, Irv Szames, Mrs. Martin Hoffman, E'en Grinblatt and Martin Hoffman.
the "Kel Mole Raehamin" prayer and that six memorial lights will be lit by children whose parents are survivors of the Holocaust. There will also be readings
of appropriate Psalms and a dramatic presentation as well.
The entire community is cordially invited to share in this Jewish destiny.
Pornography Is Subject Of Center Public Affairs Meet Monday At Bexley Theatre
Blood Day To Be Apr. 22
Sunday April 21 is the day set for crash calling of the Jewish Community by the Blood Donor Council. Members of the Jewish Community will be con¬ tacted and asked to donate about an hour of time-and one unit of blood to supply the quita for the Columbus Jewish Community Blood Bank.
Calling will take place between the hours of 10.: 00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. The goal is to contact every former donor and prospective donor in the city to inform them of B-day on May 1 from 12 noon til 6 p.m. at the Jewish. Center.
As always, babysitting is provided, sandwiches, cookies and coffee or tea are served, and this year donors get an added bonus. Each donor will receive one free pass to the' Drexel Theatre. The passes are good Sunday thru Friday until July 30.
As the Columbus Jewish community grows, so grows the need for new and more blood donors. Many mem¬ bers of the community are not aware that they are covered under a blood bank program, whether or not they personally donate. The Blood Donor Council believes itis incumbent upon
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 141
A searching inquiry into the explosive subject of pornography will be presented Monday, April 22, at 8:15 p.m. at the Bexley Theater, 2484 East Main St., by the Adult Services Committee of the Jewish Center.
The third in a series of public affairs programs produced by the committee, "Pornography - What Is It?", will be open to the public. Admission is free.
Panelists will include Dr. Nancy Clatworthy, professor of sociology at Ohio State University; Laurence Sturtz, attorney and frequent defense counsel for local theater owners charged with exhibiting obscene or, pornographic films; Robert Blair, manager of the Bexley and World Theaters, and Miles Durfey, head of appellate staff for the county prosecuting attorney.
Mrs. Helga Eisen will serve as moderator. Howard Byer is committee chair¬ man, i
"This will not be a debate with'members of ~the panel, for or, against," said Mrs. .Eisen. "Rather panelists will examine pornography from the aspects of defining it, possible effects on the behavior of children and adults, standards involved in determining what is por¬ nographic and the problems of law enforcement and censorship.-We want to be ,'informative, not opinionated."
Film clips will be shown at the start of the program to illustrate various types of film under discussion.
Previous public affiars programs produced by the Adult Services Committee dealt with impeachment and with desegration in Columbus public schools. A fourth program is being planne'd for May,
' ^4 'III
'A